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Last updated: May 30, 2026
Understanding how to enforce a share pledge is one of the most consequential decisions a lender faces when a French borrower defaults, and the post-reform sûretés framework now in force makes the choice of enforcement route more impactful than ever. France offers multiple paths for enforcing security over shares, ranging from out-of-court contractual remedies to notarial enforceable titles and full judicial seizure, each with markedly different timelines, costs and litigation risks. Article 2361 of the French Civil Code sits at the heart of pledge enforceability, governing when and how a secured creditor may realise pledged shares, and recent reforms have sharpened both the opportunities and the procedural traps.
This guide delivers the step-by-step enforcement playbook that lenders, in-house counsel and restructuring teams operating in France lending and secured finance need to navigate the process with confidence.
Yes. A properly perfected share pledge is enforceable in France, but the route and speed depend on several variables: the type of entity whose shares are pledged (SARL, SAS, SA), whether the pledge was executed in a notarial deed carrying force exécutoire, and whether the shares are held in a securities account (compte-titres) or as certificated interests.
The decision tree for lenders is straightforward:
A share pledge (nantissement de parts sociales or nantissement de compte-titres) grants a creditor a security interest over the debtor’s equity holdings in a company. It is conceptually distinct from a cession (outright transfer) and a hypothèque (which applies to real property). The pledge does not transfer ownership; instead, it grants the pledgee a priority right to realise the shares upon default of the secured obligations.
French law differentiates between pledges according to both the entity type and the manner in which shares are held:
For SARL entities, the Code de commerce requires shareholder approval (agrément) for share transfers to third parties. Where a pledge is being enforced, particularly through judicial sale or pacte commissoire, the lender must navigate these approval mechanics or obtain advance waivers. SAS bylaws are more flexible, but frequently contain pre-emption rights, drag-along or tag-along provisions, and change-of-control clauses that can complicate or delay enforcement.
Enforcement is only as strong as perfection. Before a lender can enforce a share pledge in France, the following documentation must be in order:
Executing the pledge agreement as a notarial deed (acte authentique) confers a critical advantage: the deed carries force exécutoire, meaning it is immediately enforceable without the need for a court judgment. This notarial deed enforceable title in France allows the pledgee to instruct a bailiff (commissaire de justice) to proceed directly to seizure and sale, bypassing the delay and uncertainty of judicial proceedings. Industry observers expect the use of notarial enforceable titles to increase further following the sûretés reforms, as lenders seek to reduce enforcement timelines.
There are three principal routes available to a lender seeking to enforce a pledge of shares in France. Each is suited to different circumstances, and the optimal choice depends on the pledge documentation, entity type, and anticipated borrower resistance.
This is the fastest route where the pledge has been granted over a securities account and the pledge agreement provides for out-of-court enforcement:
Practical takeaway: Pledging of securities accounts provides the most operationally efficient enforcement mechanism. Where available, lenders should always structure pledges using this route.
Where the pledge has been executed in notarial form, the lender can proceed to enforcement without a court order:
Practical takeaway: The notarial route avoids the cost and delay of litigation, but the debtor retains the right to challenge enforcement through summary proceedings (référé). Lenders should anticipate potential challenges and maintain comprehensive default evidence.
Where the pledge was executed as a private deed (not notarial) and does not provide for out-of-court enforcement, or where the lender wishes to obtain a court-ordered sale, the judicial route applies:
Practical takeaway: The judicial route is the most time-consuming (typically several months) but provides the greatest certainty of enforceability, particularly where there is a genuine dispute over the secured debt or the validity of the pledge.
The notarial enforceable title is one of the most powerful instruments available to lenders in France’s banking and secured finance framework. The Chambre des notaires provides guidance on the formal requirements, and the process is well established in practice.
The timeline from instruction to bailiff action is typically between 5 and 15 business days, depending on the complexity of the file and the responsiveness of the notary. However, enforcement can be delayed if the debtor challenges the process through summary proceedings.
Key limits: The notarial enforceable title does not override insolvency stays. If the debtor enters a formal insolvency proceeding (sauvegarde, redressement judiciaire or liquidation judiciaire) before enforcement is completed, the automatic stay will suspend all enforcement actions, including those based on a notarial title.
Article 2361 of the French Civil Code is the core statutory provision governing the realisation of pledged property, including shares. It sets out the conditions under which a pledgee may sell or take attribution of pledged assets after default, and the procedural safeguards that apply.
Under the post-reform framework, article 2361 permits the pledgee to request judicial attribution of the pledged property at a value determined by expert appraisal, or to sell the pledged property through a procedure ordered by the court. Critically, the parties may contractually agree in advance on a pacte commissoire, a clause permitting the pledgee to take direct ownership of the pledged shares upon default, without judicial intervention, provided the pledge was not granted by a consumer debtor and subject to specific formal requirements.
The practical impact of article 2361 on enforcement timing is significant:
| Entity Type | What Triggers Enforceability | Typical Timeline (Days) |
|---|---|---|
| SARL (privately held) | Board/shareholder registers updated; pledge recorded in company share register + notarial deed optional | 7–30 days (faster if notary used) |
| SAS (more flexible corporate rules) | Pledge recorded in share register; restrictions in bylaws may delay transfer | 7–45 days (depends on corporate approvals) |
| Securities account (compte-titres) | Custodian/DP instruction to freeze/control and transfer, often immediate upon proper instruction | 0–7 days (operational; depends on custodian) |
Drafting mitigation: To optimise the application of article 2361, lenders should ensure that the pledge agreement includes a clear pacte commissoire clause (where permitted), pre-agreed valuation mechanisms, and an express waiver of agrément requirements to the extent legally permissible. Early indications suggest that the reformed provisions are being interpreted to favour speed and creditor certainty where these contractual mechanisms have been properly documented.
Borrowers facing enforcement of a share pledge in France have several procedural tools to delay or block the process. The most common is an application for interim relief (référé) before the president of the relevant commercial or civil court.
Typical grounds for injunctive relief include:
A successful référé application can result in a temporary stay of enforcement, freezing share transfers until the matter is heard on the merits. The likely practical effect of such proceedings is to add 2–8 weeks to the enforcement timeline.
Lenders can significantly reduce the risk of a successful injunction by taking preventive steps at the documentation and enforcement stages:
The following comparison illustrates how enforcement timelines vary depending on the entity type and enforcement route chosen:
| Enforcement Step | SARL (Parts Sociales) | SAS (Actions) | Securities Account |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serve default notice | Day 1 | Day 1 | Day 1 |
| Expiry of cure period (contractual) | Day 5–15 | Day 5–15 | Day 3–5 |
| Instruct notary / custodian / file application | Day 16 | Day 16 | Day 4–6 |
| Obtain enforceable copy / custodian execution | Day 20–25 | Day 20–25 | Day 5–7 |
| Shareholder approval (agrément) if required | Day 25–45 (statutory delay) | Day 25–40 (bylaw provisions) | N/A |
| Transfer / sale completed | Day 30–60 | Day 30–50 | Day 5–10 |
Worked example 1, SARL: A lender holds a pledge of SARL shares under French law, executed as a private deed. The borrower defaults on Day 1. After a 10-day cure period, the lender files a judicial application. The court hearing occurs around Day 30. Shareholder agrément is obtained by Day 45. The transfer is completed by Day 55. Total timeline: approximately 55 days.
Worked example 2, Securities account: A lender holds a pledge over shares in a SAS, structured as a securities account pledge with custodian standing instructions and a notarial deed. The borrower defaults on Day 1. After a 3-day cure period, the lender instructs the custodian on Day 4. The custodian executes the instruction on Day 6. Total timeline: 6 days.
Knowing how to enforce a share pledge under French law requires careful upfront structuring, rigorous documentation and a clear understanding of the enforcement routes available. The key principles for lenders are:
For lenders operating in France’s lending and secured finance market, enforcement preparedness is not an afterthought, it is the foundation of effective security. Specialist legal advice tailored to the specific pledge structure, entity type and borrower profile is essential to a successful outcome.
This article provides general guidance on the enforcement of share pledges in France and does not constitute legal advice. Specific situations require analysis by a qualified legal professional familiar with the applicable facts and current legislation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Philippe Buerch at Clarelis Avocats , a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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